
Posts Tagged ‘10000 Russos’
RADARMENFROMTHEMOON & 10,000 RUSSOS – ” Radar Men From The Moon & 10000 Russos “
Posted: August 26, 2018 in CLASSIC ALBUMS, MUSICTags: 10000 Russos, Eindhoven, Glenn Peeters, Jan-Titus Verkuijlen, Radar Men From The Moon, The Netherlands, Tony Lathouwers
10,000 RUSSOS – ” Karl Burns “
Posted: December 3, 2015 in MUSICTags: 10000 Russos, Fuzz Club Records
10000 Russos (pronounced ‘dez mil russos’) are another Fuzz Club band who seem to have emerged from nowhere this year with an amazing debut album that is both immediate and keeps on growing. Like many Fuzz Club bands they play music that it intensely dark and brooding, but perhaps unlike most of their label mates, take some of their primary clues from The Fall, the album opener ‘Karl Burns’ is even named after a Fall drummer. The Mark E Smith style vocals are obvious throughout the album, along with other sonic clues from early Krautrock, punk and post-punk (notably the Sex Pistols and Cabaret Voltaire), as well as the two Fuzz Club common denominators of Joy Division and the Jesus and Mary Chain. This was a massive surprise when I first played this album and I have continued to find new things to enjoy here; 10000 Russos are also one of the best and most innovative bands that I have seen live this year. when they played an awesome set with brilliant visuals at the Musician in Leicester.
10000 RUSSOS – ” Stakhanovets “
Posted: August 13, 2015 in MUSICTags: 10000 Russos, Fuzz Club Records
We’ll begin our inaugural column with a quick PSA about the healing qualities of psych rock. Recently, 10000 Russos (pictured) banished my hay fever with a spell of tough, droning love. Their brand of rock is a placebo: they only sound like riff swirlers Carlton Melton and Blown Out in theory, and in secret the Portuguese outfit compel us with a foggy, almost sabotaging presentation of their genre’s hallmarks. The arrangements they write are crystalline, but they present them at an echoing distance that recalls the lo-fi sewer pop of Dirty Beaches. Their self-titled is a distorted wonderland that will clean you out. Stakhanovets from 10000 Russos debut album out May 20th on Fuzz Club Records. Vinyl out July 20th.
10000 RUSSO’s – ” 10000 Russo’s
Posted: August 1, 2015 in CLASSIC ALBUMS, MUSICTags: 10000 Russos, Fuzz Club Records
pronounced “dez mil russos” are the latest spell-weavers to join the illustrious Fuzz Club Records banner.
I recently commented that Casper was perhaps a descendant of the renowned 16th century alchemist John Dee – that he continues to conjure these latter-day “Nuggets” seemingly at will, suggests I may not have been that far off the mark!. The band’s press release confirms that, “João Pimenta (drums/vocals), Pedro Pestana (guitar) and André Couto (bass), emerged from what they call “a dark, decadent city of a peripheral country in a peripheral continent”: Porto, Portugal”.
On listening to their eponymous debut album, I see 10 000 Russos as being more akin to their ancestral sea-faring voyagers of discovery, or as Timothy Leary observed, “You are venturing out (like the Portuguese sailors, like the astronauts) on the uncharted margins. But be reassured— it’s an old human custom.”

The band’s press release attests that the LP, ’10 000 Russos’ is, “A six track / 43 minutes long obscure and stomping mantra, their self-titled LP was entirely written and recorded inside an abandoned 1980s shopping mall, where escalators have been out of order for the last fifteen years and the only source of light are some plastic Swedish designed / Chinese made bulbs”.
10 000 Russos are a band who can take the isolation of their creative surroundings, and like the formative Joy Division in their abandoned “dark satanic mill”, sculpt a myriad of sonic earthly delights that be-lie their stark gestative landscape. Listening to ’10 000 Russos’, I am immediately transported in mind to The Young Gods in their heyday, but they are just one of many primal influences on a band whose originality and passion is worn on their collective sleeves.
’10 000 Russos’ kicks off with ‘Karl Burns’, a slow burning, haunting, melancholy epic tribute to the drummer with The Fall; ‘USVSUS’, sounds like a marching, Stephen Morris inspired, “solemn drumming ritual across the wastelands of the mind”; ‘Barreiro’, is perhaps a sparse dystopian hymn to the Lisbon municipality of the same name; ‘Baden Baden Baden’, launches in with all the swagger of a ‘Pretty Vacant’-esque riff intro, hypnotically building drone layer upon deliciously kaleidoscopic drone layer; ‘Stakhanovets / Kalumet’, was described to me by guitarist, Pedro Pestano as follows, “Stakhanovets is kind of an angry song, it’s gnarly and there’s a lot of contradictory shit going on. The lyrics refer to the Stakhanovite movement, a miner’s movement in the 1930’s Soviet Union that encouraged workers to work harder to increase production in a competition based system. Basically it meant employing an almost capitalist production stimulation technique in the soviet regime. We are not directly questioning the legitimacy of this in any system but it’s interesting to find very different systems using the same principles to achieve the same goal and still keep disagreeing. Kalumet means peace pipe and that’s what you get when you get there. It has this gnawa feel to it that on one hand brings you this sort of feeling that everything is ongoing and on the other there’s a feeling of relief or letting go when it’s over. This song was born in the studio when recording Stakhanovets. After that take of Stakhanovets we stayed on playing for a while and Kalumet came out. Sometimes you have twins and you won’t know until they are both out”.
’10 000 Russos’ is an exhilarating debut LP, and one that I hope to see performed live in the very near future…
10 000 Russos debut LP was released on 20th May and is available in digital and cd formats. Vinyl in regular edition (limited to 500), and in deluxe edition (limited to 100), is available now for pre-order from Fuzz Club Records. The album is graced with fine sleeve artwork by the prodigious Olya Dyer.
Sporting a spooky psych-drone ambiance, a lurid suggestivity, and a bass that mines the fevered gutter depths of the soul, the curiously-named “Karl Burns” by Portugal’s 10000 Russos, in no small way aided by the blinkingly evocative frame-within-a-frame-within-a-frame video that accompanies it, is a dark swath of electronic voodoo pop that you can only desperately hope soundtracks your next dream. What exactly the former drummer in the Fall has to do with this track – or what he thinks about it for that matter – was not clear by the time we went to press. Some mysteries, we have to assume, just demand to remain unsolved.
“Karl Burns” is from 10000 Russos’ debut album set to be released in late April or early May on Fuzz Club Records